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Pajama Games: Getting children to go to bed
They know every excuse in the book:
I need a drink of water. I forgot to give you a hug goodnight. I heard a
noise outside my window. Bedtime can be a nightly power struggle for parents
when children do not want to go to bed resulting in no winners. Here are
some ways parents and children have both won the pajama game:
Provide a "bedtime friend."
Michael refused to sleep unless his mother lay down next to him every night.
At first, this was a comforting experience for both parent and child. But,
over time, it took Michael longer and longer to go to sleep and he would
cry whenever his mother tried to get up to go to bed herself. His mother
quickly recognized that Michael needed a transitional object or "bedtime
friend" that would substitute the feelings of comfort that she provided him
and would allow him to go to sleep alone.
Together they went and bought a stuffed animal that Michael found warm and
comforting. His mother talked with him before the trip about finding a "bedtime
friend" and what its purpose would be. After the purchase, she spoke to the
stuffed animal, in front of Michael, and told it that it had "a very important
job" to help Michael go to sleep. This employed Michael's young imagination
and helped to transfer the comforting qualities of his mother to the animal.
Of course the transition from parent to transitional object was not an easy
one and Michael resisted the change at first. But with a lot of patience
and perseverance, Michael was able to sleep on his own, with his new "bedtime
friend."
Celebrate a good nights sleep.
Even the most difficult sleeper has an occasional good nights sleep. Perhaps
it was only due to exhaustion that a child didn't get back up with a bedtime
excuse. Celebrate it anyway! In the morning prepare the child's favorite
meal. Sing, dance, or do whatever it takes to give the child positive attention
to the basic fact of having a no-excuse, sleep-filled night. Too many parents
do their "song and dance routines" at night after the excuses have been given,
reinforcing the very problem parents want to stop. During these stress times,
ignore the irritating please for water or the annoying claims of nighttime
terrors. Instead, redirect the child back to bed with a minimum amount of
words or actions. This will rechannel the power struggle and increase the
percentage for successful bedtime routines.
Discourage scary stories or television shows.
Sarah complained of monsters under the bed, ghosts in the closet, and killers
outside her window. Nothing her parents did got rid of their daughter's fears.
Finally they found the root of the problem: Sarah had been watching scary
movie at a friends house on a recent sleep over and had been exchanging scary
stories with friends at school. Her parents talked to the other parents and
convinced Sarah to stop the tales of terror. Within a week she was going
to bed without any problems.
Make a bedtime routine.
Being a single mother and working a full time job forced Eleanor to use a
babysitter for her son Ben in the evenings. Ben had developed a custom of
waiting up for his mother and spends some "time together" before going to
bed. Eleanor knew he should be going to bed earlier but felt guilty about
leaving Ben with someone else and not being with him more. Once, on a very
quilt-filled night, after yelling at him before school, she brought home
ice cream for them to share together. After that, Ben expected a treat every
night. In addition, his late night routine got later and later. It stopped
being simply about waiting for Mom to not wanting to go to bed at all. The
final straw was when Ben's teacher called and informed Eleanor that Ben was
falling in sleep in class. She resolved to change the nighttime routine.
She arranged to have more time in the mornings before he had to go to school
to spend together. She enlisted the support of the babysitter to put him
in his room and turn off the lights even if he didn't go to sleep. He was
to go through the motions of bedtime regardless. When she came home there
were no treats and their interaction was simple and quick: a kiss, a hug,
and a tuck into bed with the lights quickly out. It took some doing but Eleanor
was able to get Ben to settle into a bedtime routine.
Share the workload.
Getting Tasha to bed was work! Her mother did everything she could think
of to get Tasha to stay in bed but after a long day her mother just didn't
have the patience of the energy for a big fight. And Tasha knew all the right
buttons to push on Mom to make her mad and manipulate her into giving her
what she wanted (even after being told no). Finally, Tasha's mother recruited
the father to back her up or take over when the mother felt like she was
weakening. The parents agreed to a plan of action prior to the bedtime battle
and they consistently enforced it, winning the war. Tasha would try and divide
and conquer but the greater numbers and the parental teamwork held firm and
Tasha finally stayed in bed.
Getting children to go and stay in bed is no easy task. Parents face he limitless
excuses and untiring energy of children who know how to maneuver around their
parents with amazing ease. In order for both parties to win the pajama game,
parents must use some special bedtime tactics to even the odds. But none
of these things will prevail if parents are not consistent and provide positive
attention to good nighttime behavior. How parents cope with the bedtime
disruptions is as important (maybe more) that what they do to get their children
to bed.
About the Author
Ron Huxley is a child and family
therapist and the author of the book
"Love
& Limits: Achieving a Balance in Parenting." Pick up a copy of the
book and join the FREE online parenting class at
http://parentingtoolbox.com/hbuild.html
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